Lectures on the Dramatic Literature of the Age of Elizabeth: Delivered at the Surrey InstitutionJ. Warren, 1821 - Всего страниц: 356 |
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Стр. 2
... speak without offence or flattery ) , never shone out fuller or brighter , or looked more like itself , than at this period . Our writers and great men had something in them that savoured of the soil from which they grew : they were not ...
... speak without offence or flattery ) , never shone out fuller or brighter , or looked more like itself , than at this period . Our writers and great men had something in them that savoured of the soil from which they grew : they were not ...
Стр. 4
... speak and think of those who had the misfortune to write or live before us , as labouring under very singular privations and disadvantages in not having the benefit of those improvements which we have made , as buried in the grossest ...
... speak and think of those who had the misfortune to write or live before us , as labouring under very singular privations and disadvantages in not having the benefit of those improvements which we have made , as buried in the grossest ...
Стр. 9
... speak with venera- tion of old English literature ; but the homage we pay to it is more akin to the rites of supersti- tion , than the worship of true religion . Our faith is doubtful ; our love cold ; our knowledge little or none . We ...
... speak with venera- tion of old English literature ; but the homage we pay to it is more akin to the rites of supersti- tion , than the worship of true religion . Our faith is doubtful ; our love cold ; our knowledge little or none . We ...
Стр. 12
... speaking of . Shakespear did not look upon him- self in this light , as a sort of monster of poetical genius , or on his contemporaries as " less than smallest dwarfs , " when he speaks with true , not false modesty , of himself and ...
... speaking of . Shakespear did not look upon him- self in this light , as a sort of monster of poetical genius , or on his contemporaries as " less than smallest dwarfs , " when he speaks with true , not false modesty , of himself and ...
Стр. 13
... speak of comedy ) to be compared to the great men of the age of Shakespear , and immediately after . They are a mighty phalanx of kindred spirits closing him round , moving in the same orbit , and im- pelled by the same causes in their ...
... speak of comedy ) to be compared to the great men of the age of Shakespear , and immediately after . They are a mighty phalanx of kindred spirits closing him round , moving in the same orbit , and im- pelled by the same causes in their ...
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admiration affected Beaumont and Fletcher beauty behold Ben Jonson breath character classical comedy common Cynthia's Revels D'Ol dead death Deckar delight Devil doth dramatic Duchess of Malfy Duke Eastward Hoe effeminacy Endymion Eumenides extravagant eyes faith fancy Faustus feeling fire flowers friends Friscobaldo genius give grace hand hath head heart heaven Hodge honour human Hydriotaphia imagination imitation Jeremy Taylor Jonson kings kiss learning live look Lord Lover's Melancholy manner ment Michael Drayton mind moral Muse nature never night noble Noble Kinsmen passage passion Petrarch play poet poetical poetry pride quincunxes racter Rhod says scene Sejanus sense sentiment Shakespear shew Sir Rad Sir Thomas Brown sort soul speak spirit striking style sweet taste thee there's thing thou thought tion tragedy true truth unto virtue woman words writers